System and method for positioning a marine vessel

ABSTRACT

A marine vessel control system comprises a propulsion unit and a steering actuator for steering the propulsion unit. There is a shift actuator for shifting gears in the propulsion unit and a throttle actuator for increasing or decreasing throttle to the propulsion unit. There is an input device for providing user inputted steering commands to the steering actuator and for providing user inputted shift and throttle commands to the shift actuator and the throttle actuator. There is a sensor for detecting a global position and a heading direction of the marine vessel. A controller receives position and heading values of the marine vessel from the sensor. The controller compares the received position value to a pre-programmed position value to determine a position error difference. The controller also compares the received heading value to a pre-programmed heading value to determine a heading error difference.

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No.15/520,841, filed Apr. 20, 2017, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,829,191, which isa national stage of International Application No. PCT/CA2017/050168filed Feb. 10, 2017, which is based on Provisional Application No.62/293,745 filed Feb. 10, 2016, the disclosures of which areincorporated herein by reference and to which priority is claimed.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a system and method for positioning amarine vessel and, in particular, to a system and method forautomatically maintaining a selected position or heading of a marinevessel.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

U.S. Pat. No. 5,031,561, which issued to Nilsson on Jul. 16, 1991,discloses a steering and manoeuvering system for water-borne vesselswith two individually turnable propulsion units arranged mutually spacedathwartships in the stern portion of the vessel. The system includes anactuating turning device which is actuable by a steering control, e.g. alever, such as to maintain the propulsing units parallel during turningin normal sailing of the vehicle ahead or astern, i.e. in the so-callednormal steering mode. There is an actuating drive device for setting thepropulsive power and direction ahead/astern of the respective propulsionunits, the drive device being actuable by a power control. The system isswitchable between said normal steering mode and at least one specialmanoeuvering mode, in which the two propulsion units achieve a forceresultant directed substantially athwartships for athwartships and/orturning movement of the vessel.

U.S. Pat. No. 7,305,928, which issued to Bradley et al. on Dec. 11,2007, discloses a vessel positioning system which maneuvers a marinevessel in such a way that the vessel maintains its global position andheading in accordance with a desired position and heading selected bythe operator of the marine vessel. When used in conjunction with ajoystick, the operator of the marine vessel can place the system in astation keeping enabled mode and the system then maintains the desiredposition obtained upon the initial change in the joystick from an activemode to an inactive mode. In this way, the operator can selectivelymaneuver the marine vessel manually and, when the joystick is released,the vessel will maintain the position in which it was at the instant theoperator stopped maneuvering it with the joystick.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,491,636, which issued to Robertson et al. on Feb. 13,1996, discloses an anchorless boat positioning system which dynamicallyand automatically maintains a boat at a selected anchoring locationwithin water without the use of a conventional anchor. The system uses asteerable thruster whose thrust and steering direction are determined onthe basis of position information signals received from globalpositioning system (GPS) satellites and heading indication signals froma magnetic compass. The anchorless positioning system continuouslymonitors the position and heading of the boat and compares it with thestored coordinates of the selected anchoring location to generatecontrol signals for the steerable motor.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is an object of the present invention to provide a system and methodfor automatically maintaining a selected position or heading of a marinevessel.

There is accordingly provided a marine vessel control system comprisinga propulsion unit and a steering actuator for steering the propulsionunit. There is a shift actuator for shifting gears in the propulsionunit and a throttle actuator for increasing or decreasing throttle tothe propulsion unit. There is an input device for providing userinputted steering commands to the steering actuator and for providinguser inputted shift and throttle commands to the shift actuator and thethrottle actuator. There is a sensor for detecting a global position anda heading direction of the marine vessel. A controller receives positionand heading values of the marine vessel from the sensor. The controllercompares the received position value to a pre-programmed position valueto determine a position error difference. The controller also comparesthe received heading value to a pre-programmed heading value todetermine a heading error difference.

The controller may automatically actuate the shift actuator and thethrottle actuator in the presence of a position error difference so thatthe propulsion unit provides counteracting thrusts to minimize theposition error difference. The controller may detect a direction of adisturbance causing the position error difference. The controller mayactuate the steering actuator to steer the propulsion unit such that thecounteracting thrusts of the propulsion unit are opposite in directionto the disturbance. The counteracting thrusts of the propulsion unit maybe equal in magnitude to the force of the disturbance. The controllermay automatically actuate the steering actuator in the presence of aheading error difference to steer the propulsion unit to minimize theheading error difference.

There is also provided a method of maintaining a marine vessel in aselected position comprising determining a first global position of themarine vessel and determining a first heading of the marine vessel. Asignal command to maintain the first global position of the marinevessel is received, and the first global position of the marine vesselis stored as a target global position in response to receiving thesignal command. A second global position of the marine vessel resultingfrom a disturbance applied to the marine vessel is determined. Aposition error difference between the second global position and thetarget global position is calculated. A second heading of the marinevessel which is aligned with the disturbance is determined. The marinevessel is rotated to achieve the second heading. A propulsion unit ofthe marine vessel is actuated to produce a linear thrust. The linearthrust is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to thedisturbance, thereby minimizing the position error difference.

The second heading of the marine vessel may be aligned with thedisturbance such that a nose of the marine vessel is facing towards adirection of the disturbance, and the propulsion unit may produce aforward thrust. The second heading of the marine vessel may be alignedwith the disturbance such that a nose of the marine vessel is facingaway from a direction of the disturbance, and the propulsion unit mayproduce a reverse thrust. The second heading of the marine vessel may bealigned with the disturbance such that the force of the disturbance isapplied equally and symmetrically to the marine vessel relative to acenterline of the marine vessel.

The method may further include detecting a change in the disturbance anddetermining a third global position of the marine vessel resulting fromthe changed disturbance. A subsequent position error difference may becalculated between the third global position and the target globalposition. A third heading of the marine vessel which is aligned with thechanged disturbance may be determined. The marine vessel may be rotatedto achieve the third heading. The propulsion unit of the marine vesselmay be actuated to produce a subsequent linear thrust. The subsequentlinear thrust may be equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to thechanged disturbance, thereby minimizing the subsequent position errordifference.

There is further provided another method of maintaining a marine vesselin a selected position comprising determining a first global position ofthe marine vessel and receiving a signal command to maintain the firstglobal position of the marine vessel. The first global position of themarine vessel is stored as a target global position in response toreceiving the signal command. A second global position of the marinevessel resulting from a disturbance applied to the marine vessel isdetermined. A position error difference between the second globalposition and the target global position is calculated. First and secondpropulsion units of the marine vessel are actuated to produce respectivethrusts. A thrust intersection point of the propulsion units is at aninstantaneous center of rotation of the marine vessel such that alateral thrust is generated. The lateral thrust is equal in magnitudeand opposite in direction to the disturbance, thereby minimizing theposition error difference. A heading of the marine vessel may rotatefreely to achieve a stable heading.

There is still further provided a method of maintaining a marine vesselin a selected position range comprising determining a target position ofthe marine vessel and determining a target position range of the marinevessel. The target position range has a preset radius and a centercorresponding to the target position of the marine vessel. A currentglobal position of the marine vessel within the target position range isdetermined. A position error difference between the current globalposition and the target position is calculated. A propulsion unit of themarine vessel is actuated and steered to drive and steer the marinevessel towards the target position, thereby minimizing the positionerror difference.

The target position may be between the current global position and thedisturbance. The marine vessel may be steered and driven towards thedisturbance. A heading of the marine vessel may be aligned with adirection of the disturbance. The propulsion unit may be actuated toproduce a linear thrust which is equal in magnitude and opposite indirection to the disturbance, thereby minimizing the position errordifference. The linear thrust may be reduced when the marine vesselreaches a perimeter of the target position range and the marine vesselmay drift away from the perimeter of the target position range due tothe force of the disturbance. The propulsion unit of the marine vesselmay be a single propulsion unit.

There is still yet further provided a method of maintaining movement ofa marine vessel along a selected course comprising receiving a signalcommand to move the marine vessel along the selected course and settinga heading of the marine vessel to a pre-programmed target heading. Anangle of the target heading is different from an angle of the selectedcourse. The marine vessel may drift along the selected course. Steeringand thrust commands may be provided to move the marine vessel along theselected course. The method may include determining a current heading ofthe marine vessel and calculating a heading error difference between thecurrent heading and the target heading. A thrust may be generated torotate the marine vessel, thereby minimizing the heading errordifference. This may be displayed as shown in FIG. 17.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The invention will be more readily understood from the followingdescription of the embodiments thereof given, by way of example only,with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a marine vessel provided with aplurality of propulsion units and an improved marine vessel controlsystem;

FIG. 2 is a simplified top plan view of a joystick of the marine vesselcontrol system of FIG. 1 showing axes of movement of the joystick;

FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram showing the logic of a software algorithmwhich maintains a global position and a heading of the marine vessel ofFIG. 1;

FIG. 4 is a flowchart showing the logic of controlling a global positionand a heading of the marine vessel of FIG. 1;

FIGS. 5A to 5C are schematic diagrams showing the marine vessel of FIG.1 rotating to align a heading of the marine vessel against a directionof a disturbance;

FIGS. 6A to 6C are schematic diagrams showing the marine vessel of FIG.1 rotating to align the heading of the marine vessel in the direction ofthe disturbance;

FIG. 7 is a schematic diagram showing the disturbance acting against theheading of the marine vessel of FIG. 1;

FIG. 8 is a schematic diagram showing the disturbance acting on a sideof the marine vessel of FIG. 1;

FIG. 9 is another schematic diagram showing the disturbance acting onthe side of the marine vessel of FIG. 1;

FIGS. 10A and 10B are schematic diagrams showing the marine vessel ofFIG. 1 rotating to align its heading against a new direction of thedisturbance;

FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram showing longitudinal axes of thepropulsion units intersecting with an instantaneous center of rotationof the marine vessel of FIG. 1;

FIG. 12 is a schematic diagram showing the marine vessel of FIG. 1drifting along a course;

FIG. 13 is a schematic diagram showing the marine vessel of FIG. 1following a waypoint course;

FIG. 14 is a schematic diagram showing a marine vessel provided with asingle propulsion unit, the marine vessel being held near a targetposition with a target position range;

FIG. 15A and FIG. 15B are schematic diagrams showing the software logicof controlling a global position and a heading of the marine vessel ofFIG. 1;

FIG. 16 is a schematic diagram showing CAN networks of the marine vesselcontrol system;

FIG. 17 is a schematic diagram showing thrust that may be generated torotate a marine vessel, thereby minimizing a heading error difference;and

FIGS. 18A and 18B show a list of faults that a joystick can detect whenan ASK controller is enabled.

DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS

Referring to the drawings and first to FIG. 1, there is shown a marinevessel 10 which is provided with propulsion units in the form ofoutboard engines 12 and 14. In this example, there are two engines,namely, a port engine 12 and a starboard engine 14. However, in otherexamples, the marine vessel may be provided with any suitable number ofengines. The marine vessel 10 is also provided with a control station 16that supports a steering wheel 18 mounted on a helm 20, a control head22, and an input device which in this example is a joystick 24. Thecontrol station 16 is similar to the type disclosed in PCT InternationalApplication Publication Number WO 2013/123208 A1 which was published onAug. 22, 2013. The marine vessel 10 is accordingly provided with acontrol station generally similar to the type disclosed in PCTInternational Application Publication Number WO 2013/123208 A1 and themarine vessel 10 may be steered using either the steering wheel 18 andthe helm 20 or, alternatively, the joystick 24.

When the marine vessel 10 is steered using the joystick 24, and withreference to FIG. 2, movement of the joystick 24 along an X-axis movesthe marine vessel 10 either starboard or port. Specifically, moving thejoystick 24 in the positive direction along the X-axis moves the marinevessel starboard while moving the joystick 24 in the negative directionalong the X-axis moves the marine vessel 10 port. Movement of thejoystick 24 along a Y-axis moves the marine vessel 10 forward or inreverse. Specifically, moving the joystick 24 in the positive directionalong the Y-axis moves the marine vessel 10 forward while moving thejoystick 24 in the negative direction along the Y-axis moves the marinevessel 10 in reverse. Rotational movement of the joystick 24 about aθ-axis rotates the marine vessel 10 starboard or port. The joystick 24is accordingly operable in a neutral zone Z₀, a forward zone Z₁, astarboard zone Z₂, a reverse zone Z₃, a port zone Z₄ and a rotation zoneZ₅. The joystick 24 is also moveable along the X-axis and the Y-axis,and about the θ-axis to allow for vector thrusting. The joystick 24 mayfurther be used to provide any combination of partial or full X-axis,Y-axis and θ-axis commands. Movement of the joystick 24 as describedabove signals a pump control module 26, shown in FIG. 1, to pumphydraulic fluid to respective hydraulic actuators 28 and 30 of the portengine 12 and the starboard engine 14 based on the movement of thejoystick 24. Steering motion is thereby imparted by the hydraulicactuators 28 and 30 to corresponding ones of the port engine 12 and thestarboard engine 14 in a manner well known in the art.

It may be desired to maintain a position of the marine vessel 10relative to a reference point such as a buoy, an underwater wreck orreef, a shoreline, another vessel or a dock. Unless there is nodisturbance, i.e. external interruption from the environment such as acurrent and/or a wind, maintaining the position (station keeping)without an anchor normally requires active control of the marine vessel.Manual station keeping may be achieved by an operator observing movementof the marine vessel 10 relative to the reference point and using thejoystick 24 to steer the marine vessel to counteract the disturbance inorder to hold the position of the marine vessel. However, there may be alimited number of operators aboard the marine vessel. In order tomaximize time on the water and to allow the operator(s) to catch as manyfish as possible, it may be desirable to automatically maintain theposition of the marine vessel.

In an automatic station keeping system, the operator is replaced withelectronic sensors which measure the movement of the marine vessel andcontrol algorithms which calculate appropriate counteracting port andstarboard engine thrusts in order to maintain the position of the marinevessel. The electronic sensors may include a Global Positioning System(GPS) receiver for measuring the absolute position of the marine vessel,an accelerometer for measuring the attitude (pitch and roll) of themarine vessel, a gyroscope for measuring the horizontal rate of turn ofthe marine vessel and/or a magnetometer for determining a headingdirection of the marine vessel. These sensors are used in combination todefine a compensated global position and a compensated heading directionof the marine vessel. An inertia measurement unit may also be used toprovide compensated heading information.

In this example, the marine vessel 10 includes an electronic sensor inthe form of a GPS compass 32 as shown in FIG. 1. The GPS compass 32provides position and heading information to an automatic stationkeeping (ASK) controller 34. The GPS compass 32 in this example uses asingle GPS receiver and two antennas (a primary antenna and a secondaryantenna) for satellite signal processing. The global position of themarine vessel 10 is computed by the GPS compass 32 in reference to aphase center of the primary antenna. The heading direction of the marinevessel 10 is derived from the vector formed from the primary antenna toa phase center of the secondary antenna.

The ASK controller 34 uses three proportional-integral-derivative (PID)controllers to maintain the position of the marine vessel 10. The threePID controllers correspond to the three axes of movement: X-axis, Y-axisand θ-axis. Each PID controller has different sets of gains depending onthe operation zone. The ASK controller 34 is further provided withsoftware having an algorithm for maintaining a position and a heading ofthe marine vessel 10. FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram showing the logic ofthe algorithm. The position and heading information of the marine vessel10 obtained from the GPS compass 32 is compared with set points whichare established when the ASK controller 34 is engaged. The differencesbetween current position values and the set points generate errors whichare used by the ASK controller 34 to generate counteracting thrustcommands for the port engine 12 and the starboard engine 14. The X-axis,Y-axis and θ-axis thrust commands can be converted into shift, throttle,and steering angle commands for each engine.

As shown in FIG. 4, a global position and a heading of the marine vessel10 are controlled separately by the ASK controller 34. The globalposition of the marine vessel may be set to have a fixed target positionor a target position which moves over time. Alternatively, the globalposition control may be disabled to allow the marine vessel to driftnaturally. The heading of the marine vessel may be set to have a fixedtarget heading or a pre-programmable optimal or best heading.Alternatively, the heading control may be disabled to allow the headingto rotate freely. The global position control and heading control may becombined into different combinations to achieve a variety of settingsfor marine vessel control. For example, the global position control maybe set to a fixed target position and the heading control may be set toa fixed target heading. The result is similar to traditional automaticstation keeping.

The best heading command refers to the heading command which providesthe best engine efficiency and best heading stability. In one instance,the best heading command may be set to a steady state thrust angle(α_(ss)) which is the vector sum of the integral term of the X-axis PIDcontroller and the integral term of the Y-axis PID controller. In orderto ensure that the integral terms of the X-axis and Y-axis PIDcontrollers continue to point towards the steady state disturbance, theX-axis and Y-axis PID controllers are rotated as the heading of themarine vessel changes. This restricts movement of the marine vessel awayfrom the target position as the marine vessel rotates.

FIGS. 5A to 5C show an example where the global position control is setto a fixed target position and the heading control is set to the bestheading. The ASK controller 34, shown in FIG. 1, monitors a direction ofa disturbance 36, such as a current or a wind, applied to the marinevessel 10. If the ASK controller 34 detects that a heading angle θ ofthe marine vessel 10 is different from a disturbance angle β of thedisturbance 36 as shown in FIG. 5A, the ASK controller 34 graduallyrotates the marine vessel 10 to align a heading 38 of the marine vessel10 against the direction of the disturbance 36 such that the headingangle θ is equal to the disturbance angle β. In this example, the ASKcontroller 34 signals the port engine 12 to generate a thrust androtates the marine vessel 10 by setting a vessel heading command θ_(cmd)to equal a thrust angle α as shown in FIG. 5B. The marine vessel 10reaches a steady state when the thrust angle α, the disturbance angle βand the heading angle θ are equal to one another as shown in FIG. 5C.One or both of the engines 12 and 14 provide forward thrusts which areequal in magnitude and opposite in direction to the disturbance 36,thereby maintaining the marine vessel 10 in the fixed target position.The equality of the angles and thrusts can be time-averaged or filteredto fit the bandwidth of the vessel weight and vessel motion. Theequality can be approximated to fit the deadband and sensitivity of thevessel motion. It will be understood by a person skilled in the art thatalthough the marine vessel 10 is described above as having two enginesthat the marine vessel may be provided with any suitable number ofengines.

FIGS. 6A to 6C show another example where the global position control isset to a fixed target position and the heading control is set to thebest heading. However, in this example, the ASK controller 34 graduallyrotates the marine vessel 10 to align the heading 38 of the marinevessel in the direction of the disturbance 36. In other words, the ASKcontroller 34 signals the starboard engine 14 to generate a thrust androtates the marine vessel 10 by setting a vessel heading command θ_(cmd)(180°+β) to equal a thrust angle α as shown in FIG. 6B. The marinevessel 10 reaches a steady state when the thrust angle α, thedisturbance angle β and the heading angle θ are equal to one another asshown in FIG. 6C. One or both of the engines 12 and 14 provide reversethrusts which are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to thedisturbance 36, thereby maintaining the marine vessel 10 in the fixedtarget position.

In the examples shown in FIGS. 5A to 5C and FIGS. 6A to 6B, the engines12 and 14 provide thrusts in the forward, neutral and reverse directionsmost of the time, which are the most efficient directions for operationof the engines. In the forward or reverse direction, all engines thrustscontribute to marine vessel movement. Since the marine vessel is mostefficient in the forward or reverse directions, the ASK controller 34can maintain a global position in situations where other traditionalstation keeping systems may not.

Furthermore, when the heading 38 of the marine vessel 10 is facingagainst the direction of the disturbance 36, as shown in FIG. 5C, orfacing in the same direction of the disturbance 36, as shown in FIG. 6C,the disturbance 36 is applied equally and symmetrically to both sides ofthe marine vessel 10. As shown in FIG. 7, when the disturbance is actingagainst the direction of the heading 38, the force of the disturbance 36is applied equally and symmetrically to the marine vessel 10 relative toa centerline 200 of the marine vessel. This is particularly useful whenthere is a strong disturbance such as a strong wind or a strong currentlike in a river. The forward or reverse engine thrusts are strong enoughto fight this strong disturbance.

In contrast, when the disturbance 36 is acting on a side, for example, astarboard side 40 of the marine vessel 10 as shown in FIG. 8, thedisturbance 36 will usually create a turning moment to rotate the marinevessel. This is because an area moment of inertia of a wind area 44 foreof a center of rotation 42 of the marine vessel 10 is typicallydifferent than an area moment of inertia of a wind area 46 aft of thecenter of rotation 42 due to lateral water resistance as shown in FIG.9. When a strong wind acts on the side of the marine vessel, the marinevessel inherently catches some unbalanced rotational force as thewindage on one side of the axis of rotation of the marine vessel isdifferent than the windage on the opposite side of the axis of rotationof the marine vessel. Furthermore, traditional vector thrusting islimited due to its inefficiency since some engine thrusts are cancelledin the sideway zone.

However, there are instances where the disturbance angle may change.Referring now to FIG. 10A, the marine vessel 10 is initially at a steadystate where the heading command θ_(cmd1) is equal to the disturbanceangle β₁. The integral term of the thrust traditionally requiresposition error accumulation over time. The integral term increases overtime until it is equal to the disturbance. However, as shown in FIG.10B, the disturbance angle may change from β₁ to β₂. In the best headingcontrol mode, the target heading θ_(cmd1) is rotated to θ_(cmd2) byeither 1) waiting for the PID integral terms to adapt and build up tooppose the new disturbance direction, or 2) detecting a small XY errorchange to change the θ thrust command. The X and Y thrust commandsrelative to the marine vessel can remain the same.

However, instead of waiting for the position error to accumulate overtime, a rotation can be applied to the integral term vector₁ with thesame amplitude to become the new heading command θ_(cmd2). The headingcommand θ_(cmd2) is equal to the disturbance angle β₂. Since the headingcommand θ_(cmd2), the disturbance angle β₂ and the thrust angle α₂ areequal to one another, with the engines 12 and 14 providing forwardthrusts which are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to thedisturbance 36, the marine vessel 10 is maintained in the fixed targetposition even with a change in direction of the disturbance.

Referring now to FIG. 11, there is shown an example where the globalposition control is set to a fixed target position and the headingcontrol is disabled to allow the heading to rotate freely. The steeringangles of the engines are set such that respective longitudinal axes 212and 214 of the engines 12 and 14 intersect with an instantaneous centerof rotation 48 of the marine vessel 10 as the port engine 12 is inreverse and the starboard engine 14 is in forward. The sum of the twoengine thrusts cancels the force of the disturbance 36 such that themarine vessel 10 maintains the fixed target position. Since the headingcontrol is disabled, the heading 38 of the marine vessel 10 is free torotate to find the most stable heading due to the wind area effect. Freerotation of the heading is naturally stable in the steady state as thewindage and the current disturbance rotate the marine vessel until therotation force is balanced. Free rotation of the heading also results invery quiet operation as the shift actuators, and thus the engine gearshifters, maintain the same gear positions and the steering anglesremain the same.

Traditional autopilot systems keep the marine vessel course (theintended path of vessel motion) in the forward direction without vectorthrusting. The heading of the marine vessel is therefore dependent onthe vessel course and on the angle of the disturbance. However, in thepresent invention, the heading of the marine vessel can be setindependently of the marine vessel course. FIG. 12 shows an examplewhere the global position control is disabled and the heading control isset to a fixed target heading. Since the position control is disabled,the marine vessel 10 is allowed to drift naturally as a result of a windor a current. The heading angle θ is set independently of a course angleΦ. As a result, the heading 38 may be very different from a direction ofa course 50. The θ thrust command is provided to the joystick 24 by theθ-axis PID controller. This mode is useful to avoid tangling fishinglines during kite fishing or drift fishing as the marine vessel 10drifts at the same speed of the disturbance 36 while maintaining theheading 38. The fishing lines can also be further away from the engines12 and 14. Alternatively, the course speed may be controlled. Smallheading corrections can be achieved by generating a small thrust fromone of the engines. For example, the marine vessel 10 may be rotatedslightly starboard by generating a thrust from the port engine 12. Byusing only the rotational zone and neutral zone of the joystick 24, theengines 12 and 14 can be efficiently controlled.

FIG. 13 shows an example where the global position control is set to atarget position which moves over time and the heading control is set toa fixed target heading. When the target position moves at a constantspeed over time at a particular course over ground, the target positionand the heading direction can be entered by an operator by using thejoystick 24. The operator moves the joystick 24 to add incremental speedand directional commands. The operator rotates the joystick 24 to addincremental heading commands. The ASK controller 34 can also receivewaypoint information from a chart plotter through a standard networksuch as NMEA 2000. As shown in FIG. 13, the heading command θ_(cmd) maybe fixed and the marine vessel may follow the marine vessel coursethrough waypoints WP₁, WP₂ and WP₃. The waypoint information mayrepresent certain fishing patterns, a course over ground, a course overwater, topological map information such as a constant depth following aledge, or fishing areas such as underwater reefs or wrecks. The ASKcontroller 34 will close the loop with the waypoint course butindependent heading control and all joystick zones control will remainavailable.

Referring now to FIG. 14, there is shown a marine vessel 70 which issubstantially the same as the marine vessel 10 described above with theexception that the marine vessel 70 is provided with a single propulsionunit in the form of an outboard engine 72. The marine vessel 70 is heldnear a target position 74 with a target position range having a radius77. At t=0, the ASK controller (not shown) commands a thrust and aturning moment to drive and steer the marine vessel 70 forwardly towardsa boundary 78 of the target position range 75 and against a direction ofa disturbance 76. At t=1, a heading angle θ and a thrust angle α of themarine vessel 70 are equal to a disturbance angle β of the disturbance76. At t=2, the marine vessel 70 reaches the boundary 78 of the targetposition range 75. The thrust of the engine 72 is then turned off orreduced to allow the marine vessel 70 to drift backwards and away fromthe boundary 78 of the target position range 75 due to the force of thedisturbance 76. Alternatively, the gear may be shifted to neutral toprovide the marine vessel 70 with a very slight reverse motion. At t=3,the marine vessel 70 drifts towards the opposite side of the boundary 78of the target position range 75. The process described above thenrepeats in order to maintain the marine vessel 70 within the targetposition range 75. This mode of operation requires less shifting andfuel consumption compared to traditional station keeping systems. Thesingle engine marine vessel uses a larger target position range as ituses forward and reverse movements with some amount of steering tocorrecting heading errors.

The station keeping system with a single propulsion unit as describedabove is significantly different than a traditional station keepingsystem with a trolling motor. The outboard engine 72 has a limited rangeof steering angle, such as +/−30° from a center steering position. Thesystem presented in FIG. 14 rotates the vessel heading to use the enginethrust to cancel the disturbance force. The trolling motor itself canrotate 360° to align the propeller thrust directly to cancel thedisturbance force. The vessel heading of the trolling motor system isnot under control.

Referring now to FIG. 15, there is shown a software logic of how theposition control and heading control are implemented. In the fixedtarget position mode, when the operator requests a specific positioncommand at t0, the position momentary switch 96 takes a snapshot of thetarget global position X, Y (t0) 97. The actual global position X, Y (t)98 is subtracted from this target global position X, Y (t0) 97 tocalculate the position error XE′ and YE′ 99. With the position holdswitch 100 being ON, these errors are passed to the X and Y PIDcontrollers 101. The X and Y thrust commands are then sent to theautomatic station keeping zone controller 103. In the automatic stationkeeping mode, the thrust commands 104 are selected by the joystick modeswitch 105. These thrust commands 104 are sent to the motion controller106 to control the shift, throttle and steering commands to each engine.

Similarly, when the operator requests a specific heading command at t0,the heading momentary switch 107 takes a snapshot of the target headingθ (t0) 108. In the fixed target heading mode, the heading hold switch isswitched to the ON position. The actual heading 110 is subtracted fromthis target heading θ (t0) 108 to calculate the heading θ error 111.This error is passed to the θ PID controller 112. The θ thrust command113 is then sent to the heading hold switch 114. With the heading holdswitch being ON, this θ thrust command 113 is sent to the automaticstation keeping zone controller 103. In the automatic station keepingmode, the thrust commands 104 are selected by the joystick mode switch105. These thrust commands 104 are sent to the motion controller 106 tocontrol the shift, throttle and steering commands to each engine.

It is worth noting that, in the best heading mode, when the operatordoes not request a specific heading command, the heading hold switch isswitched to the OFF position. The heading command 115 is stillcalculated as the vector angle of the X thrust command and the Y thrustcommand. This heading command is used for the close loop controlinstead.

In the case of a change in disturbance angle similar to the situationdepicted in FIG. 10, the change of actual heading 111 over time is usedto rotate the integral term of the X thrust command and the integralterm of the Y thrust command. The amplitude of the integral vector canlargely remain the same.

Traditional PID controllers may use an input deadband based on error toavoid constantly outputting a command. This negatively impacts thecontinuity of the P, I and D terms. With this system, the P, I, and Dterms are calculated regardless of the size of the position error 99 andthe heading error 111. The P, I, D terms are continuous and responsive.Instead, programmable output dead-bands 116, 117 are used to eliminatethose thrust commands not large enough to impose a motion to the vessel.

As best shown in FIG. 1, the helm 20 and the joystick 24 are bothplugged into a first CAN network 80 that allows the helm 20 and thejoystick 24 to communicate with the pump control module (PCM) 26. ThePCM 26 has a microcontroller (not shown) and may receive manuallyinputted operator commands from either the helm 20 or the joystick 24.The PCM 26 controls the output of hydraulic pumps 82 and 84 whichrespectively provide hydraulic fluid to the respective hydraulicactuators 28 and 30 of the engines 12 and 14 based on the user inputtedcommands. Accordingly, the helm 20 and the joystick 24 may be usedindependently or together to steer the marine vessel 10.

The control head 22 and the joystick 24 are both plugged into a secondCAN network 86 that allows the control head 22 and the joystick 24 tocommunicate with a shift actuator 88 and a throttle actuator 90 of theport engine 12 as well as a shift actuator 92 and a throttle actuator 94of the starboard engine 14. The shift and throttle actuators shiftengine gears and increase or decrease engine throttle based on userinputted commands from either the control head 22 or the joystick 24 orboth. Accordingly, the control head 22 and the joystick 24 may be usedindependently or together to control shift and throttle functions. Itwill be understood by a person skilled in the art that similar controlschemes can be applied to marine vessels with more than two engines.

The GPS compass 32 and the ASK controller 34 are also plugged into thesecond CAN network 86 in this example. The GPS compass 32 providesposition and heading information to the joystick 24 over the second CANnetwork 86. The joystick 24 in turn inputs steering and shift andthrottle commands which are sent to the PCM 26 and the EST system overthe CAN networks 80 and 86 as shown in FIG. 15. The joystick 24 allowsthe operator to conveniently adjust target position and headingdirection commands. For example, the ASK controller 34 may be engaged inan initial target position. The operator can use the joystick 24 to movethe marine vessel 10 to a new position. Upon the joystick 24 beingreleased by the operator, the ASK controller 34 verifies whether the newposition is stable. If the new position is verified as stable, then thenew position becomes the new target position. A similar new headingcommand routine can also be performed with the joystick 24 to controlthe heading direction of the marine vessel 10. It will be understood bya person skilled in the art that input devices other than a joystick maybe used to implement the automatic station keeping functions such as anengaged/disengaged button or a touch screen.

The automatic station keeping system disclosed herein has three mainoperating modes: position hold mode, heading hold mode, and position andheading hold mode. When the position hold mode is engaged, the systemholds the position of the marine vessel while the heading of the marinevessel may change. When the heading hold mode is engage, the systemholds the heading of the marine vessel while the position of the marinevessel is not controlled, allowing the marine vessel to drift freelywith a current or a wind. When the position and heading hold mode isengaged, the system holds both the position and the heading of themarine vessel. If the marine vessel is not ideally aligned relative to adisturbance, such as a wind and/or a current, then position holdingperformance may be affected.

In the position hold mode with best heading enabled, the heading command(θ_(cmd) or (180°−θ_(cmd))), is the angle of the vector of the X-axisthrust command and the Y-axis thrust command. This heading command willbe used instead of an operator specified command θ_(t0). The selected θcommand is used for close loop control with the actual heading feedbackby the θ-axis PID controller. The output of the θ-axis PID controller isthe θ thrust command (%). The theta thrust command (%) rotates themarine vessel so that the actual heading is equal to the headingcommand.

The control algorithms of the ASK controller 34 control secondary axeswhen using the joystick 24. During operation of the joystick 24 alongthe X-axis, the ASK controller 34 corrects unwanted rotational motionand forward or reverse motions. During operation of the joystick 24along the Y-axis, the ASK controller 34 corrects unwanted rotationalmotion and lateral motion. During operation of the joystick 24 about theθ-axis, the ASK controller 34 corrects unwanted forward or reversemotion.

If the operator moves the joystick 24 while one of three operating modesis engaged, then the ASK controller 34 is temporarily disabled and theoperator has full joystick control. When the joystick 24 returns toneutral, an acknowledgement prompt is displayed on a CANtrack display31, shown in FIG. 1, and the operator has a period of time, for example,30 seconds to re-engage the ASK controller 34 before the promptdisappears. Station transfers between joysticks will maintain theautomatic station keeping operating modes. However, transferring fromthe joystick 24 to the control head 22 while the ASK controller 34 isactive will disable the ASK controller 34. Returning back to thejoystick 24 will not automatically re-enable the ASK controller 34.

FIGS. 18A and 18B show a list of faults that the joystick 24 can detectwhen the ASK controller 34 is enabled.

It will be understood by a person skilled in the art that many of thedetails provided above are by way of example only, and are not intendedto limit the scope of the invention which is to be determined withreference to the following claims.

What is claimed is:
 1. A method of controlling movement of a marinevessel, the method comprising: causing a single propulsion unit of themarine vessel to move the marine vessel against a direction of a forceof a disturbance on the marine vessel and away from a target position ina target position range of the marine vessel until the marine vesselreaches a boundary of the target position range; after the marine vesselhas reached the boundary of the target position range in response to thecausing the single propulsion unit of the marine vessel to move themarine vessel, allowing the force of the disturbance to move the marinevessel in the direction of the force of the disturbance; and after theforce of the disturbance has moved the marine vessel in response to theallowing the force of the disturbance to move the marine vessel in thedirection of the force of the disturbance, causing the single propulsionunit to move the marine vessel again against the direction of the forceof the disturbance and away from the target position.
 2. The method ofclaim 1 further comprising causing the marine vessel to be steered suchthat a heading of the marine vessel is against the direction of theforce of the disturbance.
 3. The method of claim 2 wherein causing themarine vessel to be steered such that the heading of the marine vesselis against the direction of the force of the disturbance comprisescausing the marine vessel to be steered when the marine vessel is on aside of the target position range past the target position in thedirection of the force of the disturbance.
 4. The method of claim 2wherein causing the marine vessel to be steered such that the heading ofthe marine vessel is against the direction of the force of thedisturbance comprises causing the single propulsion unit to steer themarine vessel.
 5. The method of claim 1 wherein causing the singlepropulsion unit to move the marine vessel against the direction of theforce of the disturbance comprises causing the single propulsion unit tomove the marine vessel against the direction of the force of thedisturbance with a heading of the marine vessel and a thrust force ofthe single propulsion unit on the marine vessel both aligned oppositethe direction of the force of the disturbance.
 6. The method of claim 1wherein: causing the single propulsion unit to move the marine vesselagainst the direction of the force of the disturbance comprises causingthe single propulsion unit to exert a first thrust force on the marinevessel; and allowing the force of the disturbance to move the marinevessel in the direction of the force of the disturbance comprisescausing the single propulsion unit to exert less than the first thrustforce on the marine vessel.
 7. The method of claim 1 wherein the targetposition range is defined by a radius extending from the targetposition.
 8. The method of claim 1 further comprising detecting thedirection of the force of the disturbance.
 9. The method of claim 1wherein the single propulsion unit is a rear-mounted propulsion unit ofthe marine vessel.
 10. An apparatus for controlling movement of a marinevessel, the apparatus comprising: a controller operable to, at least:cause a single propulsion unit of the marine vessel to move the marinevessel against a direction of a force of a disturbance on the marinevessel and away from a target position in a target position range of themarine vessel until the marine vessel reaches a boundary of the targetposition range; after the marine vessel has reached the boundary of thetarget position range in response to the controller causing the singlepropulsion unit of the marine vessel to move the marine vessel, allowthe force of the disturbance to move the marine vessel in the directionof the force of the disturbance; and after the force of the disturbancehas moved the marine vessel in response to the controller allowing theforce of the disturbance to move the marine vessel in the direction ofthe force of the disturbance after the marine vessel reached theboundary of the target position range in response to the controllercausing the single propulsion unit of the marine vessel to move themarine vessel, cause the single propulsion unit to move the marinevessel again against the direction of the force of the disturbance andaway from the target position.
 11. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein thecontroller is further operable to, at least, cause the marine vessel tobe steered such that a heading of the marine vessel is against thedirection of the force of the disturbance.
 12. The apparatus of claim 11wherein the controller is operable to cause the marine vessel to besteered such that the heading of the marine vessel is against thedirection of the force of the disturbance when the marine vessel is on aside of the target position range past the target position in thedirection of the force of the disturbance.
 13. The apparatus of claim 11wherein the controller is operable to cause the single propulsion unitto steer the marine vessel such that the heading of the marine vessel isagainst the direction of the force of the disturbance.
 14. The apparatusof claim 10 wherein the controller is operable to cause the singlepropulsion unit to move the marine vessel against the direction of theforce of the disturbance such that a heading of the marine vessel and athrust force of the single propulsion unit on the marine vessel bothaligned opposite the direction of the force of the disturbance.
 15. Theapparatus of claim 10 wherein: the controller is operable to cause thesingle propulsion unit to move the marine vessel against the directionof the force of the disturbance by, at least, causing the singlepropulsion unit to exert a first thrust force on the marine vessel; andthe controller is operable to, after the marine vessel has reached theboundary of the target position range in response to the controllercausing the single propulsion unit of the marine vessel to move themarine vessel, allow the force of the disturbance to move the marinevessel in the direction of the force of the disturbance by, at least,causing the single propulsion unit to exert less than the first thrustforce on the marine vessel.
 16. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein thetarget position range is defined by a radius extending from the targetposition.
 17. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein the controller isfurther operable to, at least, detect the direction of the force of thedisturbance.
 18. A marine vessel comprising: the apparatus of claim 10;and the single propulsion unit.
 19. The marine vessel of claim 18wherein the single propulsion unit is a rear-mounted propulsion unit ofthe marine vessel.
 20. The marine vessel of claim 19 wherein therear-mounted propulsion unit is an outboard engine of the marine vessel.